same-sex marriage

Standing in the rotunda of the Indiana Statehouse, Jim Obergefell, named plaintiff in the marriage equality case currently
before the Supreme Court of the United States, said a victory in the country’s highest court will not end the battle
against discrimination.

Roberta “Robbie” Kaplan, counsel who represented Edith Windsor in the landmark marriage equality case, will speak
about the civil rights battle for same-sex marriage at Indiana University Maurer School of Law on March 26.

The advice labor and employment attorneys provide companies is changing in light of recent court decisions on Indiana’s
laws governing same-sex marriage, and it may change again when the Supreme Court of the United States rules on the issue.

As a newlywed lesbian couple in Texas celebrate defying a statewide ban on gay marriage, the state's Republican attorney
general is preparing to tell a court Friday why it should rule their nuptials invalid.

Indiana business differed with Gov. Mike Pence and some clergy Monday on a proposed law that supporters say would protect
people and businesses from having to take part in same-sex weddings and other activities they find objectionable because of
religious belief.

A terminally ill woman whose desire to have her same-sex marriage recognized by Indiana before she died helped galvanize efforts
to overturn the state's gay marriage ban has lost her battle with cancer.

The Supreme Court is getting back in the marriage business. The justices agreed Friday to decide a major civil rights question:
whether same-sex couples have a right to marry everywhere in America under the Constitution.

This year could be described as a historic one for Indiana. The state's ban on gay marriage was overturned by the courts,
and, for the first time, a woman was chosen as chief justice of the Indiana Supreme Court. In fact, women are leading most
of the courts in Indiana. In 2014, we saw changes in the law schools, a new criminal code implemented, and attorneys in trouble
with the court and the law. (Remember the attorney who doesn't like to wear socks?)

Responding to requests from Indiana Democrats, the Office of Indiana Attorney General Greg Zoeller on Friday afternoon released
records arguing the state’s defense of statutes banning same-sex marriage cost the state about $7,000.

The Indiana attorney general's office says same-sex couples who married in the two days after the state's gay marriage
ban was first struck down in June should confirm their marriages were properly recorded.

The decision by the Supreme Court of the United States not to hear any of the same-sex marriage cases before it was unexpected
but very welcomed by the same-sex couples and their attorneys who challenged Indiana’s marriage ban.